DEATH OF THE ESTABLISHMENT

In recent weeks, I have watched with acute embarrassment the appalling spectacle of Bill Shorten scaring the hell out of us about a possible increase in the GST and Malcolm Turnbull doing likewise with Negative Gearing. They treated us all as idiots.

They could have shown some common sense by acknowledging that both issues have virtues, but that thought eluded them. After all, the GST does ensure that tax evaders do pay some tax and, if the elimination of negative gearing drives house prices down, this will help young Australians buy a house and Seniors buy a small affordable home.

Their dreadful performances finally made me realise that, in actual fact, the political establishment is now dead and the public have buried it under a huge pile of disrespect. Politicians will continue to play their games, but no one will seriously listen. They are now an irrelevance.

The demise of the establishment has been coming for a long time. It finally got up a head of steam when Abbott ran around for years trying to frighten us with ultra-childish nonsense about ‘great big taxes’. Then, he constantly appeared with military generals surrounded by countless flags trying to convince us that terrorists were about to blow us up that very second. He got to look like a comic book character and dragged the Parliament down with him.

State politicians were not much better. They ran constant scare campaigns about the sale of government assets that were based on lies that were quite shameful.

As the death of the Establishment in Australia came rapidly closer, we became attuned to the fact that it was dying in most nations, particularly so in USA and UK.

British Labour elected a long term hack politician, Jeremy Corbyn, as their leader. He beat all the Establishment candidates by a landslide in the first round of voting by running on the platform that he was against everything and he now faithfully carries out that platform.

But, it goes further. There is a revolt in David Cameron’s Cabinet against the deal he has made to stay in Europe. The rebels want to get rid of the European Establishment over in Brussels who are an overpaid incompetent rabble who deserve to be despatched. Cameron will probably lose.

Europe itself has reached a point of rebellion against Angela Merkel. In my view she is the world’s best leader, but is steadily falling behind in the polls in Germany because she agreed to admit one million refugees without asking the voters. I reckon her decision was the right one, but most German voters don’t.

The Trump saga rolls on in America. Frightening though he is, he is nevertheless a very competent self promoter who has tapped into a huge vein of political dissent against the Establishment. He represents everyone who is angry about anything and they want him to shaft everyone in the Establishment who has treated them like fools for years.

Bernie Sanders has gathered the support of the same people among the Democrats, but at least he has many more degrees of responsibility for his policies than Trump. He does know, however, that most voters reckon that Hilary Clinton is an Establishment figure and he works hard at ramming that home.

There can be no doubt that there is a Trump type vote in Australia. It will manifest itself in Australia in our 2016 Election. Just where is still to be defined, but Independents thinking of running should make their minds up quickly as 2016 is their year. They will thrive on the massive discontent that abounds among even the most responsible of voters

If Tony Windsor decides to win back his old seat of New England he will do so easily, not just because of the backlash vote, but because he has worked closely with the people at the very grassroots of his electorate for decades and they reckon, correctly, that he understands and acts on their needs. More significantly, his presence in the race will inspire many more Independents to run in every electorate in the nation.

Someone from Nick Xenophon’s team will take out Christopher Pyne in South Australia because he seems to have been ingrained in the political establishment for years.

Is it too late to stop the revolt here in Australia? The answer is Yes. It’s on.

Turnbull will win the most seats when the election comes around, but he will have to run a minority government.

This could be a good thing for democracy as politicians may learn that spin, wedging and slanging will dig them into a bigger hole.

A few virtues like common sense and integrity wont go astray. Respect for voters intelligence will become an essential asset. So will a recognition that the world has changed forever and the old dogmas of capitalism and socialism are dead and buried.

Astute political and economic management originating from the political centre is the only way forward.

Do we have the leaders in the current parliament capable of changing or do we need to toss them all out and start again?

I hope it is the former, but it may be the latter.

Yours at Large

Everald Compton

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7 thoughts on “DEATH OF THE ESTABLISHMENT

  1. Carlo Bongarzoni

    Totally agree Everald and also may be the end of the big party system. Oh except Merkel. She stands out because there’s no other leader in Europe and Europe is a failing entity that should never have been. Few of the nations pull their weight defense wise and none of them want to realty surrender their sovereignty. Hope you’re well – carlo

    Carlo Bongarzoni

    Carlo Bongarzoni Associates P/L

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  2. Rod Foster

    Well this is a pretty negative type of newsletter. Without wishing to pick a fight with anyone I say it’s primarily the community’s fault as it hasn’t done much about keeping the things like, for example, twittershpere under control. An electorate voted for a Clive Palmer, we have Jeff Seeney (As a State member he was one of the architects of the LNP loss in QLD and has done nothing for the northern end of the South Burnett which is part of his electorate) wanting to be preselected to take over Warren Truss’s seat, we have a discriminatory computer lab in QUT and because of 18c people can sue rightful users, (I wonder if Cherbourg will soon tell us white folks that we can’t use the medical faciltites we’ve paid for), we expect our political people to do it all for us, the Feds were expected to take all the opprobrium over the GST and the States were the ones benefitting (of course the Labor Party is against the GST the Unions pay almost no income tax so why would they want a GST to make them pay tax) and why aren’t the States pulled into line over expenditure and when they are the populace gets very upset. And if Tony Windsor is re-elected it just demonstrates how idiotic the populace is.

    1. Barbara

      Rod do you mean negative because you don’t agree with something? The ‘us white folks’
      makes me shudder with horror that an Australian(?) thinks in those terms.

  3. Gabrielle Drinkwater

    How LIMITED IS Malcolm due to ongoing revenge movement of Abbott @ Co? What DEALS were made to GET IN? Can Malcolm RISK an early Election with response to his seeming inaction?

  4. Anonymous

    Thank you Everald

    I must say, I have found Malcolm Turnbull’s “warming up period” very disappointing.

    1. Barbara

      I heard Malcolm Turnbull speak at a function in Brisbane almost 20 years ago and was very impressed with him and expected ‘great things’ when he entered Parliament, but walking through those doors into Parliament seem to change people and I can’t recall one thing he has done to make a change for the better.

  5. Mark

    Hi Everald

    Yes, the establishment figures have underestimated the intelligence of the voters who think. Unfortunately, there are many voters who don’t think too much, and their vote counts the same as the thinker’s does. Maybe an argument for voluntary voting, not compulsory.

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